Two Penguins Cards
June 13, 2013, 7:40 am
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: , , , , ,

Two Penguins Cards

Holy shit! It’s been forever. I have missed you guys. A friend of mine started this really cool Etsy shop. If you have loved our drunken antics, you’ll check this bad boy out.

Anastasia 



Alexis off to cause trouble in other countries
May 5, 2010, 1:38 pm
Filed under: this and that | Tags: , , ,

I just wanted to say that I love you all but we are taking a mini break as I head off to cause some trouble in Europe. I’ll be in Paris until mid May and as we all know from my last trip abroad, Anastasia doesn’t fare well while I’m away. It seems that she is always going through major life changes when I leave, so this is a quick letter to Anastasia.

Dear Anastasia,

I just want to make sure that you’ll be ok while I’m gone. I know things are crazy right now and I just love your life. Please don’t do anything too drastic because I don’t know if I’ll be able to contact you while in Europe. Please do, however, leave me many voice messages and text messages like the last time. It was entertaining to get those when I landed back in the U.S. the last time. I’m looking forward to it again. I will miss you and I promise you that I won’t get married. I do, however, promise that I will try very hard to make out with a French person (man or woman.) I will try not to have one of them want to move across the world for me. Apparently that is a problem that I have… why do they always want to move to me? Blows my mind.  Anyways, don’t do anything I wouldn’t do… the list is small but here it is… don’t blow anything up and don’t eat lasagna… that’s all I got. Feel free to embark on debauchery, drugs, alcohol and lots of sex. Ok, that’s all.

Lots of love,

Alexis

For the rest of you, get ready for the stories when I return! Starting with the disaster cluster I got myself into before I left!

A bientot!

Alexis



Anastasia gets drunk and wraps up the week
April 16, 2010, 4:39 pm
Filed under: birds and bees | Tags: , , ,

Is it bad to assume that what the drunk heart wants the sober heart agrees with?  I think most of my friends would say, “Yes! Anastasia, get your head out of your ass!” and talk me down from this Blue-Moon intoxicated state I currently find myself in. However, I can’t help but think that those close to me want what is best for me but don’t necessarily understand what that is yet. I‘m guilty of this same fault with my friends. My best friend on earth and I engaged in quite a heated textual conversation the other day about ex-lady friend.  He, somehow, missed all the signs I gave him regarding my ex-lady friend, and finally said to me…”Well, you have to follow your heart because I know you need to.”  Did he really miss those blatant signs, plastered across his phone with neon lights and bold font, or is he allowing me the opportunity to learn from mistakes? I think the latter trumps the former because no lesson is really learned until one experiences it for themselves.

It doesn’t even matter though. Arguing this point is merely semantics, because in my experience (whether you agree with me or not) no matter what anyone tells me, I need to follow my heart. Believe me, I know my heart has lead me astray many times. But that’s how I learn, right? You can have the utmost educated and life-experienced people on earth tell you not to touch the stove top when it’s hot, but you never really learn until your fingers burn.

My fingers are reaching towards that hot burner and simultaneously begging it to singe off skin to teach me to learn.

It’s true. I see it happening in slow motion and every piece of me that knows better is praying that I pull my hand back, but we all know I won’t. Because it’s those damaging third-degree burns that deliver irrefutable evidence of our poor choices. And my skin has not been scarred enough for me to make the right choices, believe it or not.

In this infinite wisdom,  I find to be true that days, weeks, or months that start in chaos often end in chaos. I’m tired of experiencing this repeatedly, yet can’t help but assume these experiences are what keep us sharp, alive and pushing forward. Because if we trap ourselves between four walls in a vain effort of protection, ultimately the only person who is at a loss is ourselves, right?

Let’s talk about my week.

Monday was like the calm before the storm. Unseasonably warm NY weather led me to attempt to grill chicken and peppers in my backyard. For fear of burning down my apartment and consequently the rest of Astoria, I called my father dozens of times to confirm I lit and managed the grill correctly. However, ill-prepared Anastasia decided to spark the grill at 7 and ultimately ended up grilling by flashlight once the sun went down.  Lesson one: beware that it takes a grill roughly forty minutes to heat up enough to cook (or burn, in my case) your food; plan accordingly.

I think the night would have been fine had some of my friends stepped up to the plate. But unbreakable plans resulted in their absence from my grilling, with the exception, obviously, of one crucial player: my ex-girlfriend.

Lesson two: don’t invite your ex lover, significant other, fuck buddy, et cetera to come over and grill unsupervised. What will ensue is easier to predict than a Nicolas Sparks novel: you’ll drink a lot, drinking will lead to talking about sex or , sex will lead to either practicing the act, or, in my case, your ex asking you ridiculous questions that ultimately are none of her business. Cue weirdness and general un-comfort all around.

I was excited for my regular Tuesday night dodge ball game until I realized ex-lady friend and I had, at some point, agreed to stop talking. By this, I mean she decided to stop talking to me, not inform me she would not attend the game (despite promises to come) and mention needing space to a mutual friend. Shocked isn’t quite the best word to describe my sentiment when I realized we were “fighting” but confused sums it up fairly well. When had this happened? Was it a result of our awkward conversation that was unfair on her part to bring up? Was I not allowed to hang out with her roommates (who I had befriended before we started sleeping together) as a result?

Well, fuck answering these questions. I did what I do best: got drunk that night and fired off ridiculously stupid and blatantly passive aggressive texts. I thought throwing balls at people’s faces would cure my blues, but ended up heightening my imaginary testosterone and heightened up my animosity even more.

Lesson three: avoid drunk texts. Seriously.

Wednesday was not too bad, with the exception of ex-lady and I getting into a semi-heated fight via gchat while she was at work. I hit the city for drinks and made a tentative date to reconnect with her later that night. I knew I didn’t want to have a drunken conversation, but fuck if I give up drinking for anyone. I got back to Astoria around 10:30 and met her on her stoop for a chit chat.

It was, hands down, the weirdest conversation I’ve ever had with an ex. First, I threw almost all of my cards on the table. They say honesty is the best policy and in this case I decided to practice what my mother frequently preached to me. It’s difficult for me to be vulnerable in front of people I’m sleeping with. I don’t like putting myself out on the edge without knowing there is absolutely no way I will plummet to the bottom. But this time, I walked right up to the edge, stepped over and landed on both my feet with a Shawn Johnson dismount. As a result, we probably had one of the best and most constructive conversations in the year that I’ve known her.

If you’re wondering why I’m being vague about what happened and what we discussed, it’s because we paused the conversation for now. Now is the time for processing and digestion. We’ll finish the conversation at some point, and when I know where we’re going, I’ll split that can open so fast with all the gruesome details my alcohol-swelling mind can remember.

Thursday started to simmer down, I met Carol Burnett, smoked too many cigarettes, and wrapped up grad school applications. But by Friday, I was so emotionally drained and exhausted, I needed to let fucking loose. A few friends decided to head to Brooklyn for a potluck: boring. Ex-lady friend started working on a show that will, thankfully, keep us out of each other’s hair for a little bit. My friend and I were alone for the night and both itching to get cray-cray.

We decided to hit up a big old lesbian bar called the Cubby Hole in the village. Tentative, after a shot of tequila, a beer, half a gin and tonic and lots of convincing, I decided to give it a shot. What could it hurt? We got to the bar around eleven, and the place was crawling with lesbians and a line halfway down the block. We wait for no one, so we headed to an equally gay and fantastic bar down the street ironically located next to the bar Alexis and I had our first awkward date at.

Lesson four: wait for no one.

We walked down the street, passed the bar where Alexis and I had our first date, and hit up another gay bar bouncing techno beats and male strippers. It took me about two minutes for me to finish my potent Beefeater and tonic. The rest that ensued is practically a dream that I barely remember. I feel like I blinked, looked up and found various gay men assaulting my good-looking friend. I expected this, to some extent, but boys, please let me finish my second drink before I have to start imagining reasons why my friend is unable to dance with you.

Then a drag queen, whose name I wish I had caught, entered our lives. Immediately, my friend warned her of our inability to pay for a reading. She insisted, spewing off some line about Karma, and took our hands nonetheless. To be honest, I was too busy texting ex-girlfriend to pay attention to what she said to my friend. Once her hand grabbed mine for a reading, I was struck by two things: first, her breath smelled like fresh mint and heaven; second, I could not tip based on her assessment.

I mean, if you read my story about The Alchemist, it goes without saying that I have issues with god and or religion. I knew right off the bat that the shit she said to me came from the religious source of getting paid rather than spirituality, despite what she said. She told me to keep a journal, which I do. She asked if I see my ex frequently, which I do. So far, she’s said two things that are fairly common for most New Yorkers. Then she told me that my ex will come back into my life.

Well, I was surprised momentarily after having a conversation with her roommate in which he confirmed that she might, in fact, come back into my life in a romantic manner.

However, the drag queen’s fatal and tip-less mistake was assuming that my ex was a man.

“Make HIM buy you flowers,” she said, “Make HIM be nice to you”

Which would be all perfect advice if my ex had a penis, which, mind you, she does not.

After that, I flirted with a Hawaiian girl who was FAR above my league and introduced my friend to the English equivalent of George Clooney.

I mean, the whole night, I’m having an amazing time. I love spending time, drunk or otherwise, one-on-one with friends. That’s when their true colors shine and you are able to fully understand where they come from and how they feel. That alone made the night worth reliving as much as possible. But I couldn’t get that idea that the conversation ex-lady friend and I had might possibly result in round two of our romantic relationship or sleeping together out of my mind. It haunted me like a Poe ghost. Because Maybe I’ll wait for her; maybe I’ll keep her up when she’s down; maybe I’ll flee like a child. Or maybe I’ll hide.

Maybes are funny because we can base our lives around them when we want to, but if you’re speaking maybes than you already know the answer. My answer is glooming in the near future.

-Anastasia Beam



Drunk texting: Anastasia’s favorite pastime
March 25, 2010, 11:00 am
Filed under: birds and bees | Tags: , , , ,

Why? Why, why, why do we embrace destructive actions? Why do we allow ourselves to walk down a path that is lit by fire with signs only pointing to misery. Why do we do this most especially with relationships? I’m inclined to believe we choose this journey because of our thirst for moments of intimacy and can justify every bad decision with hours and hours of superfluous “answers” that frequently mean nothing.

Why do we award emotions to those who neither deserve our time or intimacy? Because it feels good in the moment? Probably. But how long do those moments really last?

I’m asking a lot of questions here because they keep jogging through my mind and unfortunately I have not a single answer. I’ve been at this blog for a year now. In that year, I’ve written about subjects that I tend to keep  from people who are dear to me. This is a sad habit but also explanatory. I went through so much shit that I thought would break me but managed to learn from it. But I bottle it all up from the friends who want to help me and care about my happiness. I hide it in a back room in my brain and heart and hope it dissipates over time. I don’t think it ever really does. With all those feelings stewing  in you, they are bound to burst.

This blog is taking a total 180 because of this. When we started posting our stories online, they centered around poor decisions fueled by alcohol that often involved men who we sacrificed ourselves to. Because neither Alexis or  I cared about sharing ourselves with people who would never return such emotions, so long as we got a good story out of it. This is part of what your early twenties is all about.

Now that I’ve hit mid-twenties, I’m fucking bitter about it. Because intimacy comes in any form that you allow: a touch, a smile, a kiss; waking up to an empty bed and hoping, beyond all hope, that the one you want is next to you; or waking up and praying it was all just a bad dream.

I had a really great night up until about ten. I met a new friend of mine for drinks who has been down the lesbian-nasty-break-up-road a few more times than me. She gave me great advice about how to handle this situation but also handling myself with future endeavors. Despite summing up my entire break-up story to her, I didn’t think about ex-girlfriend like I usually do with four drinks in me.

I could her my voice sharing the facts to my friend and each feeling tied to them but it wasn’t me. It was like a narrator in a book speaking through my vocal chords and for this reason, I didn’t miss my ex as much. I was listening to my own story without noticing that  it’s actually mine.

After another friend met us, we headed back to Astoria for more drinks. Then it happened: my ex’s first drunk text message to me post break up. Not a big deal, right? I thought so, at first. But with all the shit I just spewed out at two in the morning, I think it affected me more than I care to admit. Our conversation was fairly average but felt like flirting, even though we probably weren’t. It brought me back to when we deliberately used to flirt via text message before we actually slept together, what a comfortable feeling.

Then I thought about what I was actually doing: hiding how I actually felt about the deterioration of our relationship to have a fleeting conversation that made me feel comfortable. None of my friends knew who I was texting all night, so it felt secretive and special. But she doesn’t make me feel comfortable anymore. It was the farthest thing from special. If I were smart, if I chose to avoid self-destructive decisions, I would have ignored that first drunk message instead of embarking on a two-hour texting session.

When have I ever done what’s actually best for myself in a relationship? Never, because I put partners first.

And there’s the first answer I’ve given myself all night.

-Anastasia Beam



Top 10 ways you know you “Shoulda Called It A Night”
March 18, 2010, 1:21 pm
Filed under: birds and bees | Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

I am going to share some things with you from times that I should have called in an early night, but didn’t. This way you can learn from my mistakes and call it a night before these things happen!

1. When you wake up in someone else’s clothes and look over and see a naked hairy man snorting a line of coke off the bedside table – you probably shoulda called it a night.

2. When you wake up on a couch with your best friend’s brother who is three years younger than you, his hand down your shirt and beer bottles and pizza scattered all over the table – you probably shoulda called it a night.

3. If you wake up in the basement of a football player’s house wearing the remains of a fairy costume next to an uncircumcised man and you have to do the walk of shame through their apartment over the other football player you were previously hooking up with only to return to your home where your panties were raided and spread all over the house and blood smeared on the walls from a “wrestling” injury – you probably shoulda called it a night.

4. If you wake up next to your best friend’s ex-boyfriend lying in your bed while your best friend is in the next room – you probably shoulda called it a night.

5. If the van door suddenly jolts open to reveal your friend who is in love with you staring at you in horror because you are naked and your current lover’s parts are still inside you – you probably shoulda called it a night.

6. When you wake up and your current lover is frantically trying to find one of the condoms from your night of fun – only for the condom to reveal itself later stuck in “places” – you probably shoulda called it a night.

7. When you wake up in Coney Island on the subway train, covered in puke and have no idea how to get to Brooklyn – you probably shoulda called it a night.

Yeah when you wind up here and can't figure out how to get to Brooklyn, you must have had a rough night - because this is the last stop in BK

8. If you and your friend end up in a random apartment lying next to practical strangers and they ask you to shower with them the next morning – you and your friend probably shoulda called it a night.

9. When you wake up covered from head to toe in stale beer and you have two stamps from the location where you partied the night before, stamped on your nipples – you shoulda called it a night.

10. When you wake up cuddling with an old friend, a bloody elbow, a fat lip from being punched in the mouth and 18 text messages from a desperate man – you probably shoulda called it a night.

– Alexis Patron



Surprise party with many surprises
March 16, 2010, 12:27 pm
Filed under: birds and bees | Tags: , , , , ,

Sometimes I’ll catch a look in my friend’s eye when she doesn’t know I’m watching. They light up like she’s watching fireworks, yet they look like they are building with tears. When these moments happen, she’s always smiling and I don’t have to ask what is making her happy anymore.

“I feel like a proud mother watching all my kids have a good time together” is generally the gist of what she says. When all her favorite people are in one room together, with no reason to celebrate other than having an amazing time just being together, that look engulfs her. And I love it, because she looks so beautiful with such happiness on her face. If I could figure out how to make my friends that happy all the time, I would gladly give up everything that’s special to me.

I had one of those nights on Saturday, but it was a bittersweet evening.

My friend just turned twenty five and casually mentioned a few months ago that he’s always wanted a surprise party. So, we set up a surprise party at one of our favorite dive bars. I was convinced he knew, somehow. Why else wouldn’t we ask him what he wanted to do for his birthday? Blasé is a good definition for how we all acted whenever he brought up his birthday and not because we weren’t excited for it, we just didn’t want to blow the surprise.

Ex-lady friend headed to the bar before us to set up banners made of pictures of his favorite things: nacho cheese, cigarettes, alcohol, Aunt Jackie, and prunes all decorated the back of the bar. Happy Bat Mitzvah and princess balloons hung in the air. Someone brought brownies and best of all, we managed to wrangle up wrist bands for 24oz beers priced at a bargain $4.50 all night.

Had the party happened three weeks ago, it would have been one of the best nights of my life.

We brought the birthday boy and a few other friends to the bar once we knew the majority of guests were ready and waiting. He passed through the front of the bar, skirted by a slew of random hipsters and made his way to the back. Everyone was waiting and gathered around a table. When he saw us his smile was bright. His face light up. He looked genuinely happy and completely surprised. The plan had worked.

Side note: there’s nothing I love more than seeing my friends smile. It’s those deep, honest smiles that come from the heart that make you truly grateful for the people in your life who aren’t family by blood but certainly are more than friends.

It was one of those proud-momma moments for me. Seeing him so happy made me happy. I’ve never seen him look more handsome than he did at that moment. He temporarily took my mind off the breakup, unemployment, grad school and everything else that was fogging my mind lately.

I hate admitting this (because the climax of the night came so early on) but the best part was experiencing my friend’s happiness with him. After that, however, the night became a battle for me. I fought the lush in me who wanted nothing more than to tell the lady friend that I missed her and wanted her to be happy, even if that happiness came at the expense of mine. But I abide by the rule that sober thoughts mean more than drunk ones, so I bit my tongue. I did my best to ignore her, not out of animosity but out of protection for myself and her. It was (and still is) too soon to let her back into my life. I couldn’t bear sharing my happiness with someone who just, unintentionally, inflicted so many deep wounds within me.

So, to avoid one of those drunk-man’s-words-equal-sober-man’s-thoughts moments, I did what I do best: avoided her while acting like I was having the best time of my life.

Yes, I was having a good time. I enjoyed each drink and was happy to see old friends. But that annoying little voice in the back of my head kept reminding me how much better the night could have played out had she been on my arm. That voice that is difficult to silence when it gets louder with each drink. How do you combat something that you know is bad for you in the long run but temporarily makes you feel better about all that is wrong in your life? This is the epic war I fight with myself each and every single day. It’s exhausting.

I absolutely hate that the last few stories I have written have either centered around ex-lady friend or involved her to some extent. There are so many more elements in my life that I am grateful for: family, friends, health, etc. Yet, no matter how hard I try, I can’t get her off my brain. It makes me feel like a weak individual, burdening everyone with my petty problems. If I could disappear until this blows over, I most certainly would. But hiding wouldn’t work because she always seems to find me. And she has no idea.

-Anastasia Beam



Response to David’s question – Being friends with an ex
March 11, 2010, 12:23 pm
Filed under: this and that | Tags: , , , , , ,

I’m responding to a reader’s comments in a post because that’s exactly what it deserves. And, also, I have to give David a shout out for being one of the most awesome readers and thank him for his kind words that made me feel much better. So thank you, good sir. I hope you are having a lovely day.

To see David’s comment about the last article visit: I blame optimism.

Now, it’s business time. Let’s talk about being friends with an ex. The elusive theory I never thought I’d encounter but now have been thrown into.  David asked if, in my opinion, it will be easier or more difficult to revert to friends with the ex since we are of the same sex.

I can only answer this question with my own personal experiences and what I know from watching friends go through similar experiences in the last year. Currently, I am not friends with any male that I slept with, had a relationship with, or fooled around with post high school. I am friends with one guy I fooled around with in high school and lucky for me, he’s one of my best friends on earth. With this one exception, I strictly abide to the policy of “get me off and get out of my life” apparently.

It’s not that I don’t want to be friends with these men, but for various reasons our relationship deteriorated into either unsalvageable or not worth the effort. In the case of ex boyfriend I physically cannot be friends with him yet. I know myself too well and hearing his voice will always make me want more.

The situation with the ex lady friend is a little different. This was my first same-sex relationship and at the end has left me in a wake of nothing but more confusion and more alcohol. For example: who will I date or sleep with next? Will it be a man or a woman? I don’t know. I loathe bisexuality. I loathe it like I loathe the Yankees. This is probably the most hypocritical statement I have made all week, too. I loathe it because, in my experience, people announce their bisexuality with fireworks. It’s such an attention-seeking move. It represents living in a society in which people are defined drastically by their sexuality. And that’s such bullshit because people are defined by so much more than sexuality. Sexuality makes up a tiny percentage of who you are.

But this is a hypocritical statement because for now I am bisexual. See? Even just typing that makes my skin crawl. There are things I love about both sexes. I love beards. I love broad shoulders. I love deep voices  that come with light touches. On the other hand, I love curves. I love soft skin. I love light voices and even lighter touches. I love turning people’s heads when they see me holding a girl’s hand. And I would not be interested in a woman with a beard, broad shoulders and a deep voice; just as I’m not interested in a man with curves and a falsetto.

Part of the reason why I’m having trouble getting over this (even though we’re still only on the second week) is that she never pushed me to answer the question of if I am gay or straight, and now I’m pushing myself to answer it.

Anyways, sorry, got a bit off topic there.

I have a pretty tight-knit group of friends who are lesbians and, conveniently, all friends with their exes. To answer David’s initial questions: I think it is easier for women who are in same sex relationships to remain friends with other women they were romantically involved with.

Because, generally, women are more emotional. We are more willing to go an extra mile for a friend or lover. We value close relationships with friends and even closer relationships with lovers. Now, this is not to say that men are not emotional and don’t care about their significant others but it’s just a different level with women.

This friends-with-the-ex theory is such a delicate balance. It takes time, a shit ton of effort and a bucket full of tears. And it can be a very, very fine line. This is partially what destroyed my relationship with the ex lady friend: she’s not over her ex. And look at that, they are friends!

That’s not always how it works. That could just be a unique situation. Honestly, I think my ex will be able to be friends with her ex, too, and in turn I’ll be able to be friends with her. One day. Hopefully.

– Anastasia Beam



I blame optimism
March 10, 2010, 2:43 pm
Filed under: this and that | Tags: , ,

Sometimes I wonder if I ever actually think through decisions. I mean I honestly take space and time for myself to think with my head instead of any other part of my body that frequently dictates actions.  The blessing and curse of my life is optimism. When I make the right decision or, honestly, get lucky, I sit back and bask in the glory of being a sincerely optimistic individual. But when I cross that line into the wrong decision, I blame optimism. Because I have always landed on my feet. I have survived breakups, failures, deaths, indecision, exhaustion, unemployment, and seemingly endless fights with loved ones. I have survived all these incidents and genuinely believed all of which resulted in me growing as an individual and friend. What an easy assessment to make once the grieving process has passed. I blame optimism because what if I thought glass half empty instead of half full? Would I be more likely to steer clear of decisions that which are not blatant to me?

I’m grieving now. I’m trying to turn it into acceptance and growth but, for obvious reasons, unable to allow myself the time it actually takes to accept and grow.

The lady friend and I broke up. How quickly I slipped right back into the old drink-your-face-off-and-take-Nyquil-to-help-sleep habits and it’s only been a week.

I respect and love relationships. I’d prefer to be in one. But when your name goes from present to past tense in the voice of someone you care about and love, what is the point of relationships? Once you have crossed that dangerous line of investing yourself and time in another person, it becomes a terrifying game of Russian Roulette. You pull the trigger and sometimes get lucky with a bullet-less chamber. Or you don’t.

The optimistic side of me tells me that the best part about my breakup is that we both want to remain friends. Which means we hope to eventually be friends. The pessimist in me reminds me that I have to see her all the time because of said desire to remain friends combined with our large amount of mutual friends.

There is nothing worse than that. There is nothing sadder than missing someone who is sitting right next to you.  And I’m just not sure how I’m going to eradicate this sadness.

-Anastasia Beam



Anastasia’s New Year’s Eve
February 2, 2010, 11:27 am
Filed under: this and that | Tags: , , ,

Side Note: We are taking this week to share our respective New Year’s Eve events, enjoy!

There are a few things I hate, no…despise. Just a few.

For example: people who don’t use turning signals. I’m needlessly waiting for you to drive straight into my path at an intersection in the frigid New York City winter and you shamelessly turn left without alerting me in the slightest fashion. Now I look like a tourist asshole who doesn’t know when to cross the street. Thanks.

Also, I take quite a big issue with those who have zero concept of personal space. It’s not fucking hard, people. We’re both waiting in line at the bank. I’m struggling with a ten pound bag of pennies and nickels to exchange for rent money and you’re off in your own world behind me, completely ignoring the foot-and-a-half invisible bubble that’s supposed to protect me from your hot breathe on the back of my neck. I move forward to try and reclaim the personal space that’s rightfully mine, yet you move even closer to me. You’re encroaching on valuable personal space and it takes all the willpower in my body not to turn around, swinging my cumbersome bag of metal at your head.

Last but certainly not least: New Year’s Eve. I fucking. Hate. New Years Eve. I hate it so much that from this moment forth I will abstain from using proper capitalization in reference of this despicable “holiday”.

Number one: rarely can a large group of people agree on plans. Friend A wants to go to this bar. Friend B refuses to go to that party. Friend C wants pussy; any pussy. Friend D just wants to stay home. The list goes on, and on, and on, until I have to waste precious drinking time trying to play peacemaker in the decision making process. Ultimately, said “peacemaker” roll equals tiresome negotiation involving how many drinks will be allowed at bar A, bribing people to make an appearance at party B, reminding drunks to use condoms with girl C, and disregarding my personal feelings that staying home is really the best option. Appeasement.

Everyone knows what Appeasement got Churchill in World War Two.

Number two: the fucking weather. Since some member of your group appeased each person’s individual whims, your group ends up trekking across Manhattan like the Donner party. And it’s never a mild December 31st. This year? Rain, snow, and that poop-colored slush that ends up all over your brand new pair of Louboutin’s that you just HAD to wear to that party. Last year? Negative wind chill and sheer misery. Lovely. Looking forward to next year.

Number three: drunk fucking assholes drinking like it’s January 16th, 1919 and congress just ratified prohibition. New year’s eve is the last excuse you should ever have to get black out drunk and make bad decisions. There are three hundred and sixty four other perfectly acceptable days to get hammered and sleep with strangers. Why do it on a night where drinks are blatantly over priced, drastically under filled at bars that mimic a Turkish bathhouse? Give me one reason why new year’s eve is the best drinking night and I’ll give you 364 reasons why you’re wrong.

Number four: anxiety. That fucking clock is always ticking. Tick, tock. Tick. Tock. It’s almost midnight. Who are you going to kiss? What’s going to happen? Will the world end? Will Carson Daly bust out the black nail polish and pay homage to his sprightly days at MTV? Will the drunk girl in the corner stop crying? I can’t stand it.

I’m on a roll of impressively lame and disappointing new years. This year was no exception to the rule.

My ladyfriend’s buddy from college came to visit from California. He’s a lovely young man but wanted more than anything to kick off the new year with Astoria’s gayest of gay bars. None of us wanted to go. In fact, I think we all made a large list of things we’d rather do than listen to the repetitively loud dun-dun-dun-dun techno beats playing over old speakers while men dance in cages. But in an effort to be kind to our out-of-state visitor, we agreed to go for an hour.

The bar was entirely empty with the exception of the bartender and my three friends. We stayed for one overpriced, watered down cocktail before heading back outside to the slippery, slushy disgusting NYC new year’s weather and making our way to a party.

I’m not even going to waste the time to explain how lousy this party was so I’ll sum it up with this: frat boy douche bags using the word “gay” as an adjective, crying women nearly falling over balconies, and one big, nearly-empty pitcher of sangria. Had my friend not guilted me into ringing in the new year with a bunch of strangers I wouldn’t talk to if someone paid me, I would have left five minutes after we arrived. I could have brought the new year in on the street, in a cab, in the bathroom, literally anywhere else in the world would have been better than that place.

Here’s to 2010. I’m already getting more sex than all of 2009, so I’m confident the shitty party was not a representation of how my year will be spent.

-Anastasia Beam



The cesspool
January 29, 2010, 11:23 am
Filed under: birds and bees | Tags: , , , , , ,

There’s this thing my lady friend calls the “big lesbian cesspool.”

Let’s look at some facts. In the last three elections, the Voter News Service exit poll registered the gay vote between four and five percent. Apparently the Census 2000 under-counted (awesome! go equality!) the total number of gay or lesbian households and thus the total gay and lesbian population can be estimated at five percent of the total U.S. population over 18 years of age.

Now, let’s do some (very bad) math. I live in New York City. It’s estimated that there are 8.3 million other people living around me. Multiply that by five percent and you have 415,000 other folks that either are in a strictly homosexual relationship or would like to be. Now, the tricky part: what percentage of that number are women identifying as lesbians or bisexuals? Wouldn’t it be nice if you could just halve the number since the population is generally 50 percent male and 50 percent female? But I don’t think that’s scientifically correct.

When Kinsey did his famous sexy time studies, he found that somewhere between one and two percent of women were exclusively homosexual. We’ll take that with a grain of salt since it’s a bit outdated. Ultimately the number of LGB people in the U.S. (then and now) really is quite subjective and fluid. I’m not sure a number will ever be pinned down.

So for everyone who skipped my bad math and quick googling skills: in the grand scheme of things, there aren’t a ton of gay people around. Thus, it’s safe to assume there is some inter-dating between exes and friends. And that. Shit. Gets. Complicated. Have you ever seen the L word? Let’s do a quick rundown: Bette and Tina dated. Bette dated Alice. Alice dated Dana. Dana sort of hooked up with Jenny once. Jenny dated Shane. Shane made out with Helena. Helena dated Tina. It’s a big, lesbian cesspool of dating your best friend’s ex or your ex’s best friend.

Truthfully, I didn’t believe this when my lady friend told me about the cesspool she was minorly connected to in Brooklyn. Call me naive but originally I chalked this theory to being nothing more than that: a theory, a myth, like unicorns and the iPhone. But then Alexis rolled into town for my birthday and drowned me in that cesspool with one drunken text.

We were at a lovely dinner party. Alexis made guacamole that, despite it’s poopie color due to my inability to pick out ripe avocados, was absolutely delicious. My Italian side reared its head with some bruschetta and red wine. We had too much gin, too much wine, too much pulled chicken and a super heated game of catchprase. My friend invited coworkers and my lady friend’s ex girlfriend was in town for the weekend as well, so she joined the fun. Generally, my rule of thumb is to hate any ex of anyone I’m sleeping with. But this girl is downright awesome. She acts just like a boy with me, is generous with cigarettes and introduced me to the most drunkenly violent game of rock, paper, scissors ever.

The night was winding down. Lady friend and I were lying on the floor of her bedroom trying to digest our respective food babies and my phone starts to vibrate. I was a little shocked to see a text from Alexis waiting for me. She was maybe ten feet away from me in the other room. What did she want? Why couldn’t she come into the room and tell me herself?

Alexis: Uh oh. I have something to tell you.
Me: Okay?
Alexis: It’s bad.
Me: Um, okay. Tell me.
Alexis: No, I’ll tell you when we get home.

Now at this point, Alexis rolls into the room with another friend. I’m a little perplexed as to a) why she didn’t tell me in person; b) what’s so important and c) how she manages to text me while we’re in the same room without anyone noticing.

Me: Tell me now.
Alexis: I think one of your friends is really cool.

Let’s translate: “I think one of your friends is really cool” in Alexis speak means “I want to bone one of your friends.” But something was a little fishy. When Alexis is bombed, she makes no effort to hide who she wants to bone. She’d probably tattoo it right across her forehead if she could and I don’t blame her since she usually gets what she wants. Her secretive texts immediately made me think she had the hots for my lady friend or the ex.

Me: Oh. Christ. Lady friend or ex?
Alexis: What? Dude? Come on. I think the ex is really awesome.

BAM. I just outed Alexis. Alexis had the hots for a girl. Maybe it was the wine? Maybe it was seeing me all up on another girl? The world may never know.

I must give credit where’s its due. Alexis managed to single-handedly introduce me to the big lesbian cesspool with her mini crush on my girl’s ex girl all while keeping her pants on. And it’s a shame, because the ex totally would have hit that if Alexis had made the first move.

-Anastasia Beam